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Liquid Invert Sugar


from: Unknown


Liquid cane sugar. Warm to re-liquefy if sugared. Can use when making cookie dough for softer cookies.


Dentyne Ice Peppermint Mints

 out of 5 stars

from: Candy-Breath Freshners


50 piece packages


Trident Sugarless Gum with Xylitol, Green Apple Fusion Flavor - 12/Pack, 12 ea

 out of 5 stars

from: CADBURY ADAMS.


INDICATIONS: Features of Trident Sugarless Gum with Xylitol: Artificially Flavored. Green Apple Fusion Flavor. ReCaldent. Milk Derived. 35% ...


Orbit-Wrigley's Sugarfree Gum, 12/14ct Packs

 out of 5 stars

from: Wrigleys


Just brushed clean feeling


Red Apple Jelly Belly - 16 oz

 out of 5 stars

from: Jelly Belly Candy Company


16 oz of Red Apple flavor Jelly Belly jelly beans in a clear, re-sealable bulk tub with lid. ...


Pink Grapefruit Jelly Belly - 16 oz

 out of 5 stars

from: Jelly Belly Candy Company


16 oz of Pink Grapefruit flavor Jelly Belly jelly beans in a clear, re-sealable bulk tub with lid. ...


Tootsie Pops - Box of 100 Assorted Tootsie Pops

 out of 5 stars

from: Tootsie Roll


Tootsie Pops - Box of 100 Assorted Tootsie Pops. You can't miss with this all-time favorite! Each Tootsie ...


Sugar-Free Jelly Belly 2.3 lb case

 out of 5 stars

from: Jelly Belly Candy Company


Have Jelly Belly beans without the sugar. Our sugar-free formula has 40% fewer calories than regular beans. Included ...


1 lb Leonidas Marzipan Fruits

 out of 5 stars

from: SA Confiserie Leonidas


A selection of fruit-shaped marzipan that includes apples, pears, oranges, strawberries, bananas and lemons.


Kookaburra Strawberry Licorice | 4 - 10oz Bags

 out of 5 stars

from: Kookaburra


In Australia they call the Kookaburra bird 'the laughing jackass,' because of its happy laugh. You, too, will ...



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John Hodgman is an expert. At everything. (OK, maybe not sports.) But where he really excels is in creating the illusion of expertise — and not letting pesky facts intrude on that authority. From his first book, a compendium of faux trivia aptly titled The Areas of My Expertise, to his fiction-spewing shtick on The Daily Show to his role as the bloviating PC in those Mac ads, Hodgman handles the most obscure subjects with an aura of invincible confidence. The fact that it's fake? All the funnier. Hodgman talks to Wired about his latest book, More Information Than You Require (out in October), and his new area of bona fide expertise: being semi-famous. Wired: Is your character on The Daily Show the same person narrating your books? Or, for that matter, the PC in your Mac ads? Hodgman: I should clarify at this point: I'm not that John Hodgman. There's a guy who goes on The Daily Show claiming to be me. And there's a guy who goes on the Mac ads claiming to be me. Wired: You should sue! Hodgman: No, I would say that the Resident Expert on The Daily Show is all me, or at least a heightened aspect of myself. Aside from finding humor in the deadpan descriptions of things precisely as they are, I just veer off into the fantastic and the absurd. Wired: And that has made you slightly famous. Hodgman: Well, I always had this desire to celebrate and somehow be a part of things that I thought were really great. When I wrote about Battlestar Galactica for The New York...

Wired.com



T-Mobile USA has officially confirmed what unofficially has been the talk of the town--the debut of the first Google Android based mobile phone. The T-Mobile G1 is made by HTC (the device was code...

[Thanks to dozens of spam sites using the full text of our RSS content, the feed is now only a summary. Click through to see the full story.)


As the Storage Networking World conference opens in Dallas this week, it's likely that the recent stock market and financial sector upheavals will have attendees more interested than ever in cost savings.
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Massachusetts expands trial of train-Fi: The state's train authority will spend $1.4m to expand a trial program for Wi-Fi on certain state commuter lines to all 258 coaches. The program's formal launch is Wednesday. The annual cost is estimated at $300,000, but the authority didn't try to estimate savings or other expenses involved in shifting people from cars to trains as a result of the service.

Skyhook says 300 iPhone apps access location: Location guru Brady Forrest breaks down the data about how many iPhone applications are aware of their surroundings. No numbers here about the number of queries per day Skyhook is handling from iPhones, which we would all love to know, but is certainly proprietary to their deal with Apple. Forrest doesn't mention another interesting sidenote: Skyhook corrects their database of Wi-Fi locations with every query sent by an iPhone, which as a highly mobile device, must have a dramatic effect on extending and enhancing their routine truck-based scanning.






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